It wasn’t all that early when we hit the election night parties in the Fifth District, but only the mail-in absentee ballots were in. It was neck and neck, less than 100 votes separated candidates Patrick Cleary and Ryan Sundberg. Both were in McKinleyville with supporters: Cleary at Six Rivers Brewery, Sundberg across town at the airport restaurant/bar, the Silver Lining.

With the result uncertain, we asked both candidates to look to the future as hypothetical winners figuring we’d sort out who won in the morning.

Now the “final” results are in, but the race still seems too close to call: Sundberg has 8,765 3,765 votes to Cleary’s 3,672 — just 93 apart, this with an untold number of mail-ins and provisional ballots still uncounted.

As Cleary put it this morning, “Sounds like it could be 30 days before we know the official result of the 5th District election. Apparently there are many more votes to count.”

Side note 1: As I finished my interview with Ryan Sundberg in the hallway outside the Silver Lining, a young gentleman who was waiting for a flight stopped on his way into the bar.

“So, you’re running for office?” he asked Sundberg, who explained that he was indeed running for Supervisor.

“That’s great,” said the guy, who later identified himself as Zachariah. “I’ll vote for you. What’s your name? Give me your card. I’ll get my friends to vote for you too.”

Sundberg and I jointly explained that it was Election Day and the polls were closed. It was too late to vote.

“That’s OK,” said Zachariah. “I’m a felon, so I can’t vote. And my friends are felons too, so no big deal.”

With that he disappeared into the bar leaving us shaking our heads in disbelief.

Side note 2: You’ll note that both candidates cited improving broadband access as something they’re going to work on. In a separate conversation Cleary told me that Suddenlink Almega Cable has stopped supplying broadband in Willow Creek leaving residents no hard-wired Internet access, only satellite. He sees that as an important problem that must be sorted out quickly and suggested that the community services district could potentially take on the service.

Freelance photographer and writer, Arts and Entertainment editor from 1997 to 2013.

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5 Comments

  1. article states: “Sundberg has 8,765 votes to Cleary’s 3,672 — just 93 apart” hmmm, something doesn’t add up here. Oh Editor…

  2. Ah, much better, although I think I prefer it when news sources acknowledge edits after the initial post (we did remember to tell Hank and Bob that it is the official “pick on local news” day, right?) 🙂

  3. Almega Cable? Good riddance to bad rubbish I say. It took me four months of calling, faxing and generally making them my new hobby to cancel my cable TV when I lived in Happy Camp.

    I do agree that another service needs to fill the broadband gap left by their departure.

    And hi Greg! 🙂

  4. Almega Cable does the same thing in Happy Camp as Willow Creek. They get the exclusive franchise for cable TV, then refuse to provide their internet services along with the TV signal for the more rural communities they serve.

    Almega Cable lists internet services as a big part of what they do on their web site, but their business practices paint another story, where they appear to “skim the cream” by only serving high density neighborhoods and towns with broadband in addition to TV.

    Very strange for a company who’s motto is “Empowering Communities”!

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